If you could solve one mystery about ancient coins...

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Aethelred, Dec 7, 2016.

  1. Aethelred

    Aethelred The Old Dead King

    If you could somehow solve one mystery about ancient coins, what would it be?
     
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  3. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    What names were applied to which coins by the people who used them? This may be a hundred mysteries rather than one but it seems more coins as known today were named by numismatists than recorded by history.
     
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  4. Aethelred

    Aethelred The Old Dead King

    Good one Doug, it would be on my list as well.
     
  5. Valentinian

    Valentinian Well-Known Member

    I like to know the distribution of the number of coins struck by a die, or at least the mean, at various places and times. Was it 20,000 coins per die on average? Did the distribution vary a lot from place to place and time to time?

    The answer to this would allow us to determine the sizes of many ancient coin issues, because many (mostly Greek, but some Roman) issues have been die-studied and for them we know rather closely how many dies were used.
     
  6. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    who put that X on my coin? :woot:

    [​IMG]

    but seriously, i'd love to know.
     
  7. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    It was me ;-;
     
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  8. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    "Mint records" would be very nice to have (a big massive ancient red-book!!)

    [​IMG][​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Dec 9, 2016
  9. Endeavor

    Endeavor Well-Known Member

    Some good replies here so far. Names of coins and mintages are two excellent mysteries to have solved. I honestly can't think of a better one. One that I have always wondered about is if ancient coins were round when minted like today's coins.
     
    Last edited: Dec 8, 2016
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  10. Pishpash

    Pishpash Well-Known Member

    What Doug said.
     
  11. Carthago

    Carthago Does this look infected to you?

    The purpose of serrations on Roman Republican denarii.

    L Memmius Galeria 313-1b CNG 2016.jpg
     
  12. David Atherton

    David Atherton Flavian Fanatic

    Who determined what types were struck? I'm sure it changed depending on the emperor and the time period, still it would be nice to know.
     
  13. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    Which LRBs were indented for general circulation and which were merely ceremonial or donatives.

    Also, which coins of the Romano-Gallic Empire (e.g., Tetricus I) and/or Divo Claudio coins were official and which were imitations.
     
  14. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    I have a few Greek coins that are so small my large fingers have a hard time handling. What was the purpose of such small coins? I know the change aspect, but 4-5mm?
     
  15. gsimonel

    gsimonel Well-Known Member

    Yes, we also see miniscule bronze coins between 5-9mm, in the 5th century, particularly from the Vandalic regions. I've wondered the same thing.
     
  16. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    Many of our questions require us to realize that the answer in one time and place will not be valid a few years one way or the other or a few miles away. Many early die studies benefited greatly from a system where every die was used to failure when it was replaced with a new one to be used with the still servicable opposing die. This makes figuring the sequence of dies relatively easy compared to a system that threw out dies in pairs or had half a dozen teams working sid by side but that made no effort to strike on Tuesday with the dies they used on Monday.

    New parents often mention a baby looking at a hand with a 'what is that thing' expression. We are amazed at wht they have to learn in the first few weeks. Similarly, early adopters of coinage had to learn what was best for their needs. If we decide we need several denominations, do we make the large ones huge or the small ones tiny? Saaaay, What if we used more than one metal and make the small ones out of cheaper metal???? It works the same way in the other direction like when the Romans decided the ten as bronze was a bad idea and opted for the denarius. Study of such questions is part of the fun we have that are rarely important to collectors of dates and mintmarks in modern coins but it still happens as our mint tries to decide how to make a dollar coin that is reasonable in size but not confused with a quarter. Numismatics!
     
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  17. Dougmeister

    Dougmeister Well-Known Member

    Who was the first person to say: "Wow! This coin is really old/valuable. I think I'll save it because I like the design or as an investment..."

    (instead of spending it or just regular "savings")
     
  18. Theodosius

    Theodosius Fine Style Seeker

    What was it about the 5th and 4th centuries in Greek cities that resulted in such incredibly artistic coins, which in many people's opinions have never been surpassed?

    John
     
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  19. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

  20. Ken Dorney

    Ken Dorney Yea, I'm Cool That Way...

    I think questions like this will vary depending on ones collecting interests. I have many (and none will ever be answered) but for the moment I ponder about the literacy rates in the ancient world. If illiteracy was high, why the need for monumental inscriptions (and coin legends) which nobody could read? If literacy was high, why is it never mentioned in the histories that survive?
     
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  21. rrdenarius

    rrdenarius non omnibus dormio

    #1
    Who decided to switch from these -
    aes rude pieces.jpg aes sig.jpg
    to these -
    aes grave t.jpg aes grave t.jpg Cast As.jpg Cast As rev.jpg
    The decision should have been relatively late in the Roman Republic, after 300 BC.

    #2
    Rome first paid their soldiers about 400 BC during fighting at Veii. They did not start making coins until 300 BC. How were the soldiers paid?
     

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